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Legalizing weed may benefit society, economy

By Matt Havelka

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Published: Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Updated: Sunday, December 14, 2008

Legalizing weed

Media Credit: Dan Buhrdorf

Marijuana is a mind altering drug, and not unlike its wet counterpart alcohol, it has the ability to unite or divide those discussing its place in American society.

According to federal surveys, more than 70 million Americans over the age of 18 have smoked marijuana. Its effects are described as an altered perception that causes feelings of well-being, relaxation and reduced stress. It has also been attributed to an increased appreciation of humor, food and music.

Its low toxicity is responsible for the well-known fact that marijuana has never directly caused a death. It was even reported by the Washington Post in 2006 that marijuana smoking, even in extreme cases, does not lead to lung cancer, while cigarettes cause 440,000 deaths a year.

So why is marijuana illegal in the first place? In a 2002 Zogby International poll, American's ranked marijuana as far less dangerous than alcohol and cigarettes, yet those things can be bought by a legal patron at most gas stations.

Marijuana's illegality is a matter of business history. In 1937, the marijuana tax was passed with help from anti-hemp newspaper mogul William Randolph Hearst. The ferocious and corrupt Hearst had significant financial interest in the timber industry, and when it was found that hemp - cannabis grown for non-drug use - could be made into a stronger paper, he fought for a ban on cannabis plants completely by printing frivolous newspaper stories warning of marijuana's dangers. The bill passed, due in large part to his financial support and, as they say, the rest is history.

In 2003, when the National Office of Drug Control Policy reported the government was spending $29 billion annually to prosecute and incarcerate marijuana users, the negative public response to the report sparked the largest interest in the pro-weed cause ever. In 2006, a Time/CNN poll stated 72 percent of Americans supported marijuana decriminalization, which reduces marijuana-use penalties to fines alone. Decriminalization has been implemented in 13 states, including Nebraska, and could reach 20 by 2010.

Could this increased interest in decriminalization ultimately lead to legal weed? It's hard to say, but as the decriminalization movement gains steam, so does the legalization movement. With a modern legalization policy, the government could monitor who was buying this drug and at what age, just as they have done with alcohol and tobacco for years. Not only would it keep drug dealers from selling weed to kids, it would send a dagger into the stomach of the black market drug industry.

In 2006, marijuana was named America's most valuable cash crop, with an estimated production value exceeding $35 billion annually, which exceeds corn and wheat production combined. By making marijuana a legal commodity, the government could keep drug dealers from banking off the drug's mass appeal.

So what would happen if marijuana was legal? During the prohibition of the 1920s, people who wanted to drink continued to do so. The same can be said of marijuana prohibition. If weed were legalized, stoners would still get high, and non-users would still have the right to choose if marijuana was right for them or not.

In 2005, Harvard professor and economist Jeffrey Alan Miron issued a report that stated that marijuana should be legal and the crop should face taxes much like those seen with tobacco or alcohol. If realized, he predicted the United States would earn an estimated $6.2 billion annually. This extra tax revenue could be a real economic boom.

The ultimate gains the United States could see from legalized weed are far-reaching, but it's a hard case to sell to those opposed to it. Many people have the stigma that weed ruins lives, when it can be said alcohol has ruined millions of more lives, yet it's still legal. It also can be said that more than 3 million violent crimes are committed by drunken people every year and alcohol causes a rise in domestic and sexual abuse in American families.

Can the same be said of weed? If somebody's husband or father smoked a joint before returning home for the night, would he want to beat his wife, high as a kite? The effects of marijuana have been said to block anger - especially physical anger.

Maybe if marijuana were legal, our murder and domestic abuse rates would drop, or our economy wouldn't be in trouble. Maybe our jails wouldn't be full of people whose lives are ruined because they got caught with weed and more people would take time to sit back and realize that the good things in our world outweigh the bad.

Maybe everything would be different.

matthavelka@dailynebraskan.com

Comments

57 comments
Chalsea
Thu Oct 22 2009 11:18
WEED IS GREAT....i can go to work n be high....it doesnt stop you from what your doin inless your jus a really lazy person. but if your a person who gets what they have done then it shouldnt be a thing for you to get up n go.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 12:47
i think if weed is legal it would creat a new industry in the US and it would take away from gangs that run drugs arcoss boarders and it also mite decrease crime and maybe deaths
Trint Duringer
Mon Oct 19 2009 22:40
Great job on the article!
BD
Fri Sep 25 2009 16:33
i think that they should leaglize weed because ti would make some lives so much better
tax and spend
Wed Aug 26 2009 21:52
Why not legalize murder and put a tax on it to? If you clowns think a little extra tax money is worth the trouble caused by legalizing something than why not let people kill anyone that annoys them, like dim witted pot heads. I mean you kill the idiot who bothers you and then you pay a murder usage fee to the government. Makes about as much sense as you potheads do.
Hemp: A thousand and one uses.
Tue Aug 25 2009 22:27
Marijuana for money? Sort of gives new meaning to the phrase "money to burn". What do you do with Marijuana clothes when they wear out? Smoke them? I do agree that hemp would make better paper than wood pulp. It grows faster and is easier to turn into paper pulp with less use of harmful chemicals.
Jen
Tue Aug 25 2009 13:59
Marijuana can be use for paper, and clothing. Also this of the money we (taxpapers) would save from anti-marijuana campaingns. also, think of the tax dollars from legalizing.
I like this legal stuff
Mon Aug 24 2009 23:04
I was thinking. If marijuana would help the government to increase its tax revenue than why not go further and legalize other activities. For one how about cannibalism? Heck it goes on anyway why not put a tax on everyone who eats someone. Lets say a tax rate of 5 dollars per hundred weight. We could offer tax reductions for eating the obese, the elderly, and the terminally ill. Children, generally considered more succulent and tender, would be subject to higher tax rates. In this way the obese, the terminally ill, the disabled, and the elderly would be eliminated thus reducing a strain on the system. Our president would applaud such a gesture. Just think, this would reduce the surplus population and reduce world hunger all at the same time. We could also use this solution to reduce the number of unwanted cats and dogs. New restaurants like Tabby's would pop up all over the nation.
legalizing cannibalism would create millions of jobs thus decreasing the unemployment rate. Heck we could decrease unemployment even further by eating the unemployed.
Maybe if cannibalism were legal, our murder and domestic abuse rates would drop, or our economy wouldn't be in trouble. Maybe our jails wouldn't be full of people (since they'd be eaten). No longer would people's lives be ruined because they got caught eating someone and more people would take time to sit back and realize that the good things in our world, like a good liver, outweigh the bad
Stoned sex: Is is better for you or required of the girl unlucky enough to be your partner?
Mon Aug 24 2009 22:40
I have a life. Do YOU? Probably not. Besides anyone who brags about his sex live doesn't have one.
stoned sex is tops
Sat Aug 22 2009 07:20
get a life and have a joint and mellow out
For Josh
Mon Aug 3 2009 17:41
Gee Josh you sound like a an example of the claim that prolonged marijuana usage results in impaired cognitive skills. For example You say "when my kids grow up ill tell them anything that comes from the earth is probably alright in moderation. " I take it that marijuana is no different than anything else that comes from the ground like alcohol or tobacco, corn, wheat or rice. Everything that comes form the ground is "probably alright in moderation after all". So by all means have some, Jasmine, Larkspur, Oleander, Rosary Pea, Belladonna, Poison Ivy, Jimson Weed mushrooms like the Jack o Lantern, or the Green Spored Lepiota or Hemlock. Why there are good things that come from the ground. According to you there is no difference between a bowl of corn flakes and a bowl of toadstools or for that matter, between alcohol, tobacco, or marijuana even though each affects the human body differently. But don't invite me over for dinner.
You also want to teach you kids lessons for when they grow up but you seem to forget that possession of marijuana is illegal. If the law takes notice of you you could face fines, jail time, or even a lengthy stay at the State pen but maybe the foster parent that will be raising you children will remember to teach them what you want them to learn. Not to responsible a move either as a parent, job holder or church member.

This is a list of the things that Marijuana can do for you.
# Impaired perception
# Diminished short-term memory
# Loss of concentration and coordination
# Impaired judgment
# Increased risk of accidents
# Loss of motivation
# Diminished inhibitions
# Increased heart rate
# Anxiety, panic attacks, and paranoia
# Hallucinations
# Damage to the respiratory, reproductive, and immune systems
# Increased risk of cancer
# Psychological dependency
By the way marijuana is jam packed with nature's goodness, tar, 3 to 5 times more than tobacco. So its no big surprise the marijuana smokers are three times more likely to develop cancer of the head and neck than non smokers.
Also, George Jung started his drug smuggling career hauling pot up from Mexico. He latter graduated to smuggling cocaine and is presently doing a 40 year stretch at a federal prison. You might say marijuana was a gateway drug for him.

Kat
Sun Aug 2 2009 16:20
I completely agree with this article. I am in my 20s and I go to college- land of the plentiful weed. I have smoked pot and I know many people that do- I consider it a part of life and a fun, non-hazardous way to enjoy parties and hang out with friends. We can all see with the continued growing support of the majority of the American population that weed will eventually be legalized; it's all about the when really. I support the legalizatoin of marajuana and it is of my opinion that those that don't just enjoy restricting the personal habits of others- to which I say: it doesn't kill people, it doesn't send anyone into a rage, and it has nothing to do with anyone else except the consumer. You want to tax it? Fine. I'm all for setting up a few added benefits for the economy, just hurry up and get it over with already.
Josh
Tue Jul 28 2009 14:56
sounds like the guy who wrote those eight enteries below me is on meth, i smoke weed, i also have a job and a family, and go to church. Its every persons choice what they put in their bodies, and in these days more and more people are becoming aware of the fact that weed makes people hungry and happy. when my kids grow up ill tell them anything that comes from the earth is probably alright in moderation. marijuana is no more of a drug then tobacco or booze and its time for the weed witch hunt to end.
Your name
Wed Jul 8 2009 16:48
Hey Matt your so right. I mean I was watching Lucy smashing some grapes and this memory loss thing thats a bunch of bull. Hey wait a minute didn't I just say this stuff. Far out!! Deju vu all over again.
George Jung
Wed Jul 8 2009 16:45
I'd say that Marijuana is a gateway drug. I started out smuggling marijuana then I graduated to cocaine smuggling cause that's were the money was at. Not so harmless though. RIght now I'd doing a 60 year stretch at a federal pen. Drugs are drugs.
Dupe dealer
Wed Jul 8 2009 16:40
I disagree with you. Marijuana does lead to violence. Hell last week I had to kill two competitors just to stay in business.
Wife beater
Wed Jul 8 2009 16:38
I always smoke a joint after I beat my wife and children. We all used to smoke pot before I beat them but everyone was to mellow. I mean it just defeats the whole purpose. Besides I don't think you should have a big smile on your face while you beat your wife and she shouldn't have one while you beat her. So from now on when I got a beating in mind I grab a fifth of Jack.
Tommy Chong
Wed Jul 8 2009 16:33
ITS ILLEGAL!!!!!! WOE MAN NO BUDDY TOLD ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Guess I better put out this joint and act like nothing's happening.
RIght on man!
Wed Jul 8 2009 16:27
Your so right I've been smoking weed for years. They say it causes memory loss and a general lose of all ambition. Heck I can't remember when I started smoking the stuff nor do I have any desire to find out and who needs to work man. I mean I just sit around and smoke weed eat my munchies and watch I love Lucy all day. Its real cool to because by the time they get around to rerunning the original episodes I don't remember what was on them. Every time I watch Lucy its like the first time. And I owe all to that little wacky weed. Heck it don't harm you I don't do any thing and if you smoke enough you won't do anything either.
Any way got to go Lucy's on. Wow dude its her smashing grapes, I've never seen that one before. Ought oh I think the couch is starting to creak and groan. Better see if the neighbor's thrown away a stronger one.
Bring back prohibition
Wed Jul 8 2009 16:18
Alcohol is legal and all those people using it commit all kinds of violent crimes. My solution: don' t legalize Marijuana that doesn't make sense and isn't related to alcohol use anyway. Out law alcohol. Since legalizing alcohol didn't eliminate alcohol related crime legalizing marijuana won't either since by your logic on compares to the other. Not that I agree